No 2 slip catalyst

ABSTRACT

Disclosure relates to a slip catalyst for reducing a NO 2  content in an exhaust train of an internal combustion engine flowed through by an exhaust gas flow, which has an oxidizing catalyst for the formation of NO 2  and a particulate filter arranged downstream for binding carbon black particles and simultaneous and/or subsequent reaction of the same with NO 2  formed on the oxidizing catalyst, having a substrate that is provided with a coating, which coating reduces a proportion of NO 2  in the exhaust gas flow flowing through. The coating has at least two elements from the group of rare-earth metals, which are present in the coating in the form of a salt or an oxide or in an elementary form and in a concentration of more than 300.0 g/m 3 .

The invention relates to a slip catalyst for reducing a NO₂ content in an exhaust train of an internal combustion engine flowed through by an exhaust gas flow, in particular an exhaust train of a diesel engine, which has an oxidizing catalyst for the formation of NO₂ and a particulate filter arranged downstream for binding carbon black particles and simultaneous and/or subsequent reaction of the same with NO₂ formed on the oxidizing catalyst, comprising a substrate that is provided with a coating, which coating reduces a proportion of NO₂ in the exhaust gas flow flowing through.

Furthermore, the invention relates to an exhaust train of an internal combustion engine, comprising an exhaust gas purification device flowed through by an exhaust gas flow, which has an oxidizing catalyst and optionally a particulate filter, wherein a slip catalyst for the reduction of a NO₂ content in the exhaust train flowed through by the exhaust gas flow is arranged downstream.

According to the prior art, particulate filters are provided in exhaust trains of diesel engines, which particulate filters filter out the carbon black particles contained in the diesel exhaust gas. However, with increasing load by carbon black particles, the particulate filters lead to a higher exhaust backpressure. In order to avoid this, it is necessary to incinerate continuously or intermittently at certain time intervals the carbon black particles located on a particulate filter or filtered out thereby. An increased exhaust backpressure and/or a drop in the engine power can thereby be avoided.

A corresponding concept lies in connecting an oxidizing catalyst upstream of a particulate filter, which oxidizing catalyst oxidizes the nitric oxide (NO) contained in the exhaust gas to nitrogen dioxide (NO₂). The oxidizing catalyst is generally coated with a precious metal such as platinum or palladium for this purpose. In the particulate filter connected downstream, however, the carbon black particles are filtered out of the exhaust gas. The NO₂ present in the exhaust gas and the NO₂ (secondary NO₂) formed on the oxidizing catalyst reacts on the particulate filter with the carbon black particles held there with incineration of the same. Systems of this type operate automatically from temperatures of 250° C., i.e. the particulate filter is constantly regenerated without additional measures being necessary. In this context it is called passive regeneration. A corresponding device is referred to as a Continuous Regenerating Trap (CRT). It is also possible in this connection to provide only one component, which acts as an oxidizing catalyst, but at the same time also filters carbon black particles out of the exhaust gas flow, which are immediately reacted with NO₂ on the oxidizing catalyst.

The problem occurs in CRT systems that in all operating states, i.e., even at low operating temperatures in the exhaust train, an NO₂ excess is desired on or in the particulate filter so that a passive regeneration of the particulate filter can take place or the carbon black particles are 100% converted. This can mean that a NO₂ content at the end of the CRT system is increased compared to the exhaust gas directly exiting from the engine. An increased NO₂ content in the discharged exhaust gas is not desired, however. In fact, legislation currently stipulates that an increase in the NO₂ concentration in the exhaust train is no longer permissible or is permissible only within certain limits.

According to the prior art, it is possible with CRT systems to reduce a NO₂ content in the exhaust gas flow by providing so-called Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR). A solution containing urea is thereby injected into the exhaust train after the particulate filter. The solution containing urea releases ammonia and reacts at a downstream catalyst with NO₂ with the formation of non-toxic gases. However, an SCR system requires a high operating expenditure. Thus, among other things, a tank must be provided for urea solution, which requires an additional expenditure in the production and operation.

The object of the invention is to disclose a slip catalyst of the type mentioned at the outset with which a reduction of a NO₂ content in an exhaust gas flow can be easily achieved.

It is a further object of the invention to disclose an exhaust train of the type mentioned at the outset in which a NO₂ content in an exhaust gas flow can be easily reduced.

The object of the invention is attained according to the invention in that with a slip catalyst of the type mentioned at the outset, the coating has at least two elements from the group of rare-earth metals, which are present in the coating in the form of a salt or an oxide or in an elementary form and in a concentration of more than 300.0 g/m³. The concentration data refer here and below to the elements per se regardless of whether the rare-earth metals are present in the form of a salt, an oxide or in an elementary form. The further object of the invention is achieved by an exhaust train of the type mentioned at the outset with a corresponding slip catalyst.

One advantage achieved with the invention is to be seen in particular in that the coating with at least two elements from the group of rare-earth metals leads to a significant reduction in the NO₂ content in an exhaust gas flow of a diesel engine. Furthermore, portions of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide (CO) are effectively reduced in the exhaust gas flow. Although the reaction mechanism is not yet known, it is assumed that the hydrocarbons react with NO₂ so that the latter is reduced.

It is preferred that the coating has two or more elements of the rare earth metals respectively in a concentration of 300.0 to 50000.0 g/m³. Interestingly, it was established that with these high concentrations of two or more rare earth metals in the coating, a particularly effective reduction of NO₂ takes place. A minimal sum concentration of the at least two rare earth metals is preferably 800.00 g/m³ or more.

It is particularly preferred that the coating has elements of the rare earth metals selected from the group comprising lanthanum, yttrium, cerium, neodymium and/or samarium. Coatings with these elements cause a particularly efficient reduction of NO₂.

Furthermore, it has proven useful if the coating has vanadium and/or palladium and/or rhodium. A vanadium concentration can be 100.0 to 10000.0 g/m³. A concentration of rhodium is preferably in a range of 200.0 to 2000.0 g/m³. If palladium is provided, the concentration thereof is advantageously 150.0 to 15000.0 g/m³.

Although on the one hand the precious metals palladium and/or rhodium can be provided, it is expedient on the other hand that the coating is essentially free from platinum, since a presence of platinum can be disadvantageous with respect to a reduction of NO₂.

Furthermore, it is advantageous if the coating contains barium and/or manganese, wherein these elements are present, for example, in the form of an oxide or a salt. Concentrations of barium as well as magnesium are preferably respectively in the range of 150.0 to 1500.0 g/m³, again based on the elements. The presence of barium and/or manganese in the coating causes a reduction of the minimum temperature for a reduction of NO₂, so that with the presence of one or preferably both of the elements, a reduction of NO₂ can already take place from a temperature of 100° C., which is much lower than with SCR systems, which work effectively only from a temperature of 200° C.

The coating can be composed of several coating layers. It is preferably provided that the coating has a lower coating layer on which an upper coating layer containing the rare earth metals is deposited. The lower coating layer is a so-called wash coat coating layer known from the prior art, which is composed essentially of aluminum oxide. In order to form the largest possible surface and thus to achieve a high catalytic efficiency, the upper coating layer can contain particles of crystalline silicon dioxide or a glass-like silicon dioxide phase, which particles on average are smaller than 100 nm.

The substrate can be formed in principle by any desired materials that are known from exhaust gas purification technology. For example, the substrate or the carrier can be embodied as a metal foam or ceramic foam, metallic woven wire or as a ceramic wall flow filter. It is preferred that the substrate or the carrier is formed from a ceramic material, in particular cordierite. In contrast to wall flow filters, the substrate can thereby be embodied with parallel channels, which extend from an inlet side to an outlet side of the substrate. This ensures that the slip catalyst does not contribute markedly to the increase of an exhaust backpressure. In order to nevertheless have a large catalytically active surface available, in a plane perpendicular to the parallel channels the substrate has fewer than 250, preferably approx. 100 to 200, cells per square inch (cpsi).

The further object of the invention is achieved as mentioned by means of an exhaust train of the type mentioned at the outset, in which the slip catalyst is embodied according to the invention. One advantage achieved with an exhaust train according to the invention can be seen in that a content of NO₂ at the end of the exhaust train is lower than at the start, although the exhaust train comprises a CRT system.

In the radial direction, the slip catalyst preferably has lateral plates that are impermeable to gas and on which the slip catalyst is held in a housing of the exhaust train. This type of embodiment of the exhaust train comes to bear in particular when existing CRT systems are retrofitted with a slip catalyst according to the invention, in order at the end side to reduce a content of NO₂ in the exhaust train. It is then necessary only to open up a housing and to insert the slip catalyst and subsequently to connect the housing again with a clamp. It can be provided that a nozzle for the injection of hydrocarbons is arranged between the oxidizing catalyst or the particulate filter and the slip catalyst. In this case it is possible, if necessary, to promote a reduction of NO₂ by means of the injection of short-chained hydrocarbons, for example, with low hydrocarbon concentration in the engine-side exhaust gas flow.

Further features, advantages and effects of the invention are shown by the following description of exemplary embodiments. The drawings, to which reference is made thereby, show:

FIG. 1 an exhaust train in cross section;

FIG. 2 a retrofitted exhaust train in cross section;

FIG. 3 a possible embodiment of an exhaust train in region III according to FIG. 2;

FIG. 4 a diagram regarding the reduction of a content of NO₂ in an exhaust train with varying load of an engine.

FIG. 1 shows an exhaust train 3 of a diesel engine in cross section along a longitudinal axis. The exhaust train 3 is flowed through by an exhaust gas flow 2. The exhaust gas flow 2 enters the exhaust train 3 at an inlet side 6. Starting from the inlet side 6 up to an outlet side 7, an outer shape of the exhaust train 3 is determined by a housing 10. The housing 10 widens from the inlet side 6 towards a center region, before it tapers again towards the outlet side 7. An exhaust gas purification device 8 is arranged in the center region, widened in cross section. The exhaust gas purification device 8 comprises an oxidizing catalyst 4 and a particulate filter 5 connected downstream. The exhaust gas purification device 8 or oxidizing catalyst 4 and particulate filter 5 together form a CRT system, such as is known from the prior art. At the oxidizing catalyst 4, which for this purpose can be coated with suitable materials, NO present in the exhaust gas flow 2 is oxidized to NO₂. The NO₂ thus formed, like any already existing NO₂ on the particulate filter 5, reacts there with carbon black particles filtered out of the exhaust gas flow 2 with combustion of the same. Provided there are suitable operating temperatures, the exhaust gas purification device 8 operates without additional regenerating means, that is, passively. However, this presupposes that an excess of NO₂ is present in all operating states with respect to a load factor with carbon black particles on the particulate filter 5. As a result, the NO₂ concentration in the exhaust gas flow 2 at the end of the particulate filter 5 is consistently higher than in the region of the inlet side 6. In this connection these are also referred to as NO₂ secondary emissions. In order to reduce the NO₂ secondary emissions as well as possible, a slip catalyst 1 is provided in addition downstream of the particulate filter 5. The slip catalyst 1 has a substrate or a carrier, which is gas permeable and basically can be composed of any desired materials that are known from the exhaust purification of vehicles. For example, the substrate can be composed of a metal foam, a ceramic foam, a metallic wire mesh or also a wound metal film. The use of a substrate in the form of a wall flow filter is also possible. However, it is preferred that the substrate or the carrier is composed of a ceramic material such as cordierite and has a plurality of parallel channels that extend parallel to the longitudinal axis of the exhaust train 3.

With regard to the embodiment of the size of the channels, it is provided that the substrate in cross section has fewer than 250 cpsi. A size of the channels is favorable that results in cross section perpendicular to the channels in a pore quantity of 100 to 200 cpsi. The substrate or the carrier has a first coating layer that is embodied as a wash coat coating layer and essentially is composed of aluminum oxide. A further upper coating layer is applied to the wash coat coating layer. In addition to aluminum oxide and/or silicon oxide, this upper coating layer has the elements given in Table 1 below.

TABLE 1 Elements of the upper coating layer Element Form Preferred content (g/m³) Rhodium Elementary 200.0 to 2000.0  Palladium Elementary 150.0 to 15000.0 Copper Oxide 100.0 to 10000.0 Titanium Oxide  100.0 to 150000.0 Lanthanum Oxide 300.0 to 20000.0 Vanadium Oxide 100.0 to 10000.0 Cerium Oxide 500.0 to 50000.0 Barium Oxide 150.0 to 1500.0  Manganese Oxide 150.0 to 1500.0 

Furthermore, the elements yttrium with a content of 300.0 to 10000.0 g/m³, neodymium with a content of 150.0 to 5000.0 g/m³ and/or samarium with a content of 100.0 to 3000.0 g/m³ can be advantageously provided. However, this is not mandatory.

The lower coating layer preferably comprises silicon with a content of 50.0 to 20000.0 g/m³, aluminum with a content of 50.0 to 15000.0 g/m³ and iron with a content of 600.0 to 60000.0 g/m³.

Both coating layers are produced by immersion in a corresponding solution or suspension and subsequent calcination at a temperature of approx. 500° C. It has proven to be expedient thereby in order to enlarge a catalytically active surface, that crystalline or amorphous particles of silicon dioxide are present in the solution or suspension for the production of the upper coating layer, which particles have an average particle size of less than 100 nm.

The exhaust train 3 can be prefabricated in a factory and installed in the exhaust train of a motor vehicle, for example. However, it is also possible, as shown diagrammatically in FIGS. 2 and 3, to additionally retrofit an exhaust train 3, already equipped or subsequently fitted with a CRT system, of a motor vehicle operated by diesel with a slip catalyst 1. In this case the housing 10 is cut open along the circumference, after which the slip catalyst 1 is inserted. In order to render possible a simple insertion, the slip catalyst 1 is equipped in the radial direction with lateral plates 9, which are impermeable to gas. The plates 9 are embodied in a thin manner and have a thickness of only 1 to 2 mm. Preferably, the plates 9 are formed of a steel. The slip catalyst 1 with the radial plates 9 can then easily be inserted into the housing 10 without special structural measures regarding the exhaust train 3 being necessary. For this purpose seals 11 are provided at the sides of the plates 9, which seals seal towards the housing 10, and the slip catalyst 1 with the radial plates 9 is inserted and subsequently fixed with a clamp 12 guided around the housing 10.

FIG. 4 shows a diagram regarding a NO₂ reduction in an exhaust train 3 with a slip catalyst 1 according to the invention. For various engine load stages with an increasing speed DZ of a diesel engine, in the exhaust train 3 respectively the temperature T_(vor) was measured before the slip catalyst 1 and the temperature T_(nach) was measured after the slip catalyst 1. Furthermore, the portions of hydrocarbons HC, carbon monoxide CO and nitrogen dioxide NO₂, respectively in ppm, were measured. Concentration measurements were thereby carried out for each engine load stage approximately half of the time before the slip catalyst 1 and approximately half of the time after the slip catalyst 1. As can be seen from FIG. 4, after the slip catalyst 1 NO₂, CO and the hydrocarbons HC are reduced to almost zero. 

1. A slip catalyst for reducing a NO₂ content in an exhaust train of an internal combustion engine flowed through by an exhaust gas flow, in particular an exhaust train of a diesel engine, which has an oxidizing catalyst for the formation of NO₂ and a particulate filter arranged downstream for binding carbon black particles and simultaneous and/or subsequent reaction of the same with NO₂ formed on the oxidizing catalyst, comprising a substrate that is provided with a coating, which coating reduces a proportion of NO₂ in the exhaust gas flow flowing through, characterized in that the coating has at least two elements from the group of rare-earth metals, which are present in the coating in the form of a salt or an oxide or in an elementary form and in a concentration of more than 300.0 g/m³.
 2. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating has two or more elements of the rare earth metals respectively in a concentration of 300.0 to 50000.0 g/m³.
 3. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating has elements of the rare earth metals selected from the group comprising lanthanum, yttrium, cerium, neodymium and/or samarium.
 4. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating has vanadium and/or palladium and/or rhodium.
 5. The slip catalyst according claim 1, characterized in that the coating is essentially free from platinum.
 6. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating contains barium and/or manganese.
 7. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating has a lower coating layer on which an upper coating layer containing the rare earth metals is deposited.
 8. The slip catalyst according to claim 7, characterized in that the lower coating layer is composed essentially of aluminum oxide.
 9. The slip catalyst according to claim 7, characterized in that the upper coating layer contains particles of crystalline silicon dioxide or a glass-like silicon dioxide phase, which particles on average are smaller than 100 nm.
 10. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the substrate is formed from a ceramic material, in particular cordierite.
 11. The slip catalyst according to claim 1, characterized in that the substrate is embodied with parallel channels, which extend from an inlet side to an outlet side of the substrate.
 12. The slip catalyst according to claim 11, characterized in that in a plane perpendicular to the parallel channels the substrate has fewer than 250, preferably approx. 100 to 200, cpsi.
 13. An exhaust train of an internal combustion engine, comprising an exhaust gas purification device flowed through by an exhaust gas flow, which device has an oxidizing catalyst and optionally a particulate filter, wherein a slip catalyst for the reduction of a NO₂ content in the exhaust train flowed through by the exhaust gas flow is arranged downstream, characterized in that the slip catalyst is embodied according to claim
 1. 14. The exhaust train according to claim 13, characterized in that in the radial direction, the slip catalyst has lateral plates that are impermeable to gas and on which the slip catalyst is held in a housing of the exhaust train.
 15. The exhaust train according to claim 13, characterized in that a nozzle for the injection of hydrocarbons is arranged between the oxidizing catalyst or the particulate filter and the slip catalyst. 